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  1. S. Sacred Heart Cathedral (Dodge City, Kansas) Sacred Heart Church (Jersey City, New Jersey) St. Andrew's Episcopal Church (Denver, Colorado) St. Florian Church (Hamtramck, Michigan) St. George's School (Rhode Island) St. James' Episcopal Church (Manhattan) St. Luke's Methodist Church (Monticello, Iowa)

  2. By and large, Ralph Adams Cram (1863–1942) is remembered today as the creator of impressive Gothic churches and collegiate buildings. The Cathedral of St. John the Divine and St. Thomas' Episcopal Church in New York, the Princeton Graduate College and Chapel, and a variety of turn-of-the-century buildings at West Point—these are the most ...

  3. Ralph Adams Cram (born Dec. 16, 1863, Hampton Falls, N.H., U.S.—died Sept. 22, 1942, Boston) was an architect and writer, and the foremost Gothic revival architect in the United States. Inspired by the influential English critic John Ruskin , Cram became an ardent advocate of and authority on English and French Gothic styles.

  4. Ryland Hall is a historic academic building located on the University of Richmond campus in Richmond, Virginia. The building was originally built for Richmond College, which together with Westhampton College became the University of Richmond in 1920. It was designed by architect Ralph Adams Cram and built in 1913 in the Collegiate Gothic style.

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Marsh_ChapelMarsh Chapel - Wikipedia

    Ralph Adams Cram was selected as its architect. He designed the building in the Gothic style. The building was dedicated in 1950. Because of competition from Modernist and other architectural influences, the chapel marked the end of a period of Collegiate Gothic construction on American campuses. [citation needed]

  6. 31 de out. de 2017 · Something was brewing between Julia Gardiner Gayley and Ralph Adams Cram in 1920. Perhaps it began in late 1919. Julie and her daughter Mary, normally candid and forthright in their letters to one another, discussed him almost exclusively in cryptic remarks and coded language. He was “R.A.C.,” just plain “R,” or “our Gothic friend.”.

  7. The Fourth Presbyterian Church of Chicago was formed on February 12, 1871, by the merger of Westminster Presbyterian Church and North Presbyterian Church. [1] The combined congregation dedicated a new church building on Sunday, October 8, 1871. The Great Chicago Fire began later that day and destroyed the young congregation's new sanctuary.